1. bookmark - Noun
2. bookmark - Verb
Something placed in a book to guide in finding a particular page or passage; also, a label in a book to designate the owner; a bookplate.
Source: Webster's dictionaryshe stuck a bookmark in my heart and walked away. Saul Williams
To use an electronics analogy, closing a book on a bookmark is like pressing the Stop button, whereas when you leave the book facedown, you've only pressed Pause. Anne Fadiman
Don't time travel into the past, roaming through the nuances as if they can change. Don't bookmark pages you've already read. James Altucher
Additional functions allow you to bookmark sections of a recording for easy reference, and you can export the files straight to your computer. Source: Internet
“AddThis.com is a clever service that could well change the way people bookmark Websites and subscribe to feeds,” Said Chris Shipley, executive producer of DEMOfall. Source: Internet
And he did it all on his own: he wrote the game, placed it on a public web server, hooked up AdSense, and then submitted it to a few social bookmark sites. Source: Internet